From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Date: Sun, 14 May 2000 16:44:49 -0400 From: Anthony Sorace anothy@eden.rutgers.edu Subject: [9fans] Re: Plan9 should be free distributable Topicbox-Message-UUID: ad3f009c-eac8-11e9-9e20-41e7f4b1d025 Message-ID: <20000514204449.sZ2q6erZCW5UOIQHvrS7h_RZHdvNpIN4c0vS3QTMg2A@z> //I'm more interested in keeping the OS alive then making sure a //bunch of engineers at Lucent stay on the payroll. there are, in my mind, two things that make Plan 9 an interesting and enjoyable system to use: ideas and implementation. while proliferation of the OS may likely help keep the "ideas" portion of that equation going, i'm more than a little skeptical of what it would do to the "implementation" portion. well beyond just being "neat" or "cool", Plan 9 is _elegant_, maybe even beautiful. i look at the comparative quality of systems (in terms of code quality, consistancy, usefulness, etc.) between the various BSDs and Linux, and the BSDs always come out ahead (not to say their coding is so great...). that's precisely because of the fact that some central body has (in most cased) kept some sort of control over the BSD development/distribution process, while Linux is alot more open. and i'm sorry, but while twenty high school or college kids mucking around in their basement may get drivers for that new ReallySuper 3D9000 video card or my Nintendo Power Glove produced faster than jmk's turning out drivers, all of them in the world arn't going to come close to designing a _system_ nearly as nice as the folks who've done Plan 9 in the labs. and not only do i think they deserve to be rewarded for that, but i think it's in MY (our) interests to keep them employed, to keep them working on the project, and to keep them in control of the project. also note above that i'm talking about systems, not parts of systems. Plan 9 is a new system in a way that Linux/BSD/etc. are not. it's harder to do systems right than it is to do stand-alone apps, even large ones. or maybe it's just me. : anothy;